256. Music Lessons

I’ve taken music lessons, given them, and my wife and I paid someone to give them to our children. As a student, I hated both piano lessons and voice lessons. I took them because I thought it was the price I had to pay if I wanted to be good at playing the piano and singing. My school music teacher had heard me playing piano once, and had told my parents that I had talent, and that it would be a crime to waste it. My parents had responded by paying her to give me piano lessons.
I’m not sure, but I don’t think piano lessons did much to improve my playing. I learned that I shouldn’t rest my fingers on the piano when my teacher was watching; I should curve my fingers. I learned that I should look at the sheet music when my teacher was there, and pretend to be reading it. Once in a while, my teacher would stop me and point to a note. I’d look at the note, figure out what it was, and correct myself. When my teacher wasn’t around, I played whatever I wanted, except when my mother heard me and said, “Bob, that’s not what you’re supposed to be practicing.”
As for voice lessons, I didn’t practice at all, and I didn’t understand much of what my teacher was trying to teach me, partly because of her German accent, and partly because even when I could understand her words, I often couldn’t make heads nor tails of her meaning.
When my daughters took piano lessons, they seemed to be having a little more fun than I’d had, but they didn’t stick with it, and we didn’t force them to. I don’t think either one of them wishes they had continued lessons. It’s typical for adults to wish they’d taken lessons and persevered, but having had lessons and occasionally tried to persevere, I am one adult who wishes I had spent my time doing something else. I’m glad I can sing and play piano, but I don’t think lessons had much to do with either.
Then I tried giving piano lessons. I loved it. I let the children tell me how they wanted to spend the time, what they wanted to learn. Sometimes I actually taught them to read music, but more often, we had fun exploring the piano keyboard, picking out tunes, and talking. At first, I felt guilty about the talking, which often had nothing to do with music. But whenever I checked it out with parents, they told me it was okay. I guess my style was famous and infamous enough to attract people who liked it and repel those who didn’t.
I don’t believe that talent is in great danger of being wasted. If a child wants to develop talent, that will probably happen with or without lessons, and is often surprisingly possible even when the talent isn’t immediately apparent. If there’s a good child/teacher match, lessons can be helpful. But if a child doesn’t want to take lessons, I don’t believe that anything is wasted by allowing the child not to.

Similar Posts

  • 165. Death

    Of all the things I don’t know about, death is king. I’ve never died, and the people closest to me haven’t died, either. I’ve known people who have died, but of course, I immediately lost my ability to communicate with them, so knowing them didn’t bring me much closer to understanding death. And I’ve read…

  • 90. Thespians

    Last week, I tried to speak for non-thespians. I’m not a non-thespian. I’ve worked with many children who’ve shared my love for drama, and I think I can write with more confidence about what’s going on for us when we rehearse and perform. When we do things well, we like to be appreciated. Sometimes all…

  • 41. Favoritism

    Everybody likes some people more than others. Even teachers. We’re human, too. Teachers, in fact, like some children more than others. Even the most egalitarian teachers, somewhere deep inside, have some favorite children, and some they don’t consider their favorites. A parent or child may have a hunch who the teacher likes or dislikes, but…

  • 302. The Honor Society

    There was one special day each year when some students in my high school were inducted into the National Honor Society. Parents of those who were going to be inducted were notified in advance, so that they could plan to attend the induction ceremony. But they weren’t supposed to tell us they’d been notified. So…

  • 513. Summer School

    I went to summer school twice, as a student: I went to take biology, so that I could take chemistry in my sophomore year and be done with science – spend my junior and senior years taking courses I liked more. And I took driver education so that I could get cheaper insurance when I…